A Coat of Many Colors

Immigration, Globalization, and Reform in New York City's Garment Industry

Daniel Soyer

Pages: 296

Fordham University Press
Fordham University Press

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Paperback / softback
ISBN: 9780823224876
Published: 15 April 2004
$44.00
Hardback
ISBN: 9780823224869
Published: 15 April 2004
$105.00

For more than a century and a half—from the middle of the 19th century to the end of the 20th—the garment industry was the largest manufacturing industry in New York City, and New York made more clothes than anywhere else.

For generations, the industry employed more New Yorkers than any other and was central to the city’s history, culture, and identity. Today, although no longer the big heart of industrial New York, the needle trades are still an important part of the city’s economy—especially for the new waves of immigrants who cut, sew, and assemble clothing in shops around the five boroughs.

In this valuable book, historians, sociologists, and economists explore the rise and fall of the garment industry and its impact on New York and its people, as part of a global process of economic change. Essays trace the rise of the industry, from the creation of a Manhattan garment district employing immigrants from nearby enements to the contemporary spread of Chinese-owned shops in cheaper neighborhoods. The tumultuous
history of workers and their bosses is the focus of chapters on contractors and labor militants and on the experiences of Italian, Chinese, Jewish, Dominican, and other ethnic workers. The final chapter looks at air labor, social responsibility, and the political economy of the offshore garment industry.

Historians and other scholars of labor, business, urban geography, gender, ethnicity, and internatioanl relations will find this book an indispensable resource. The uniformly accessible prose and high level of scholarship make it ideal for adoption in undergraduate courses.---—Journal of American History

Offers both historical and contemporary takes on the garment industry in New York.---—American Jewish History

. . .A well-crafted book, an important resource, ad a very good read.---—Journal of American Ethnic History

...the contributors address the topic from a wide variety of new perspectives that have resulted from the fruitful interaction of labor historians and scholars and practitioners in other fields.---Michael Naas, —Choice